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Monitoring the early stage self-assembly of enzyme-assisted peptide hydrogels

journal contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by Richard WilliamsRichard Williams, J Gardiner, A Sorensen, S Marchesan, R Mulder, K McLean, P Hartley
The early stages of the self-assembly of peptide hydrogels largely determine their final material properties. Here we discuss experimental methodologies for monitoring the self-assembly kinetics which underpin peptide hydrogel formation. The early stage assembly of an enzyme-catalysed Fmoc-trileucine based self-assembled hydrogel was examined using spectroscopic techniques (circular dichroism, CD, and solution NMR) as well as chromatographic (HPLC) and mechanical (rheology) techniques. Optimal conditions for enzyme-assisted hydrogel formation were identified and the kinetics examined. A lag time associated with the formation and accumulation of the self-assembling peptide monomer was observed and a minimum hydrogelator concentration required for gelation was identified. Subsequent formation of well defined nano-and microscale structures lead to self-supporting hydrogels at a range of substrate and enzyme concentrations. 1H NMR monitoring of the early self-assembly process revealed trends that were well in agreement with those identified using traditional methods (i.e. HPLC, CD, rheology) demonstrating 1H NMR spectroscopy can be used to non-invasively monitor the self-assembly of peptide hydrogels without damaging or perturbing the system.

History

Journal

Australian journal of chemistry

Volume

66

Issue

5

Pagination

572 - 578

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

0004-9425

eISSN

1445-0038

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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